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Gene Vincent and His Blue Caps - Discography (1956-1963)

Gene Vincent and His Blue Caps - Discography (1956-1963)
  • Title: Discography
  • Year Of Release: 1956-1963
  • Label: Capitol Records, Columbia
  • Genre: Rockabilly, Rock'n'Roll
  • Quality: APE (image, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 05:28:01
  • Total Size: 1,5 Gb (scans)
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

Gene Vincent and His Blue Caps - Discography (1956-1963)


1956 - Bluejean Bop!:
01. Bluejean Bop
02. Jezebel
03. Who Slapped John?
04. Ain't She Sweet
05. I Flipped
06. Waltz Of The Wind
07. Jump Back, Honey, Jump Back
08. Wedding Bells (Are Breaking Up That Old Gang Of Mine)
09. Jumps, Giggles & Shouts
10. Up A Lazy River
11. Bop Street
12. Peg O' My Heart
13. Race With The Devil
14. Be-Bop-A-Lula
15. Woman Love
16. Crazy Legs
17. Gonna Back Up Baby
18. Well, I Knocked Bim Bam



1957 - Gene Vincent and His Blue Caps:
01. Red Bluejeans And A Ponytail
02. Hold Me, Hug Me, Rock Me
03. Unchained Melody
04. You Told A Fib
05. Cat Man
06. You Better Believe
07. Cruisin'
08. Double Talkin' Baby
09. Blues Stay Away From Me
10. Pink Thunderbird
11. I Sure Miss You
12. Pretty, Pretty Baby
13. Teenage Partner (version 1)
14. Five Feet of Lovin' (version 1)
15. B-I-Bickey-Bi Bo-Bo-Go
16. Important Words (version 1)
17. Five Days, Five Days



1958 - Gene Vincent Rocks! And the Blue Caps Roll:
01. Brand New Beat
02. By the Light Of The Silvery Moon
03. You'll Never Walk Alone
04. Frankie And Johnnie
05. In My Dreams
06. Flea Brain
07. Rollin' Danny
08. You Belong To Me
09. Your Cheatin' Heart
10. Time Will Bring You Everything
11. Should I Ever Love Again
12. It's No Lie
13. Wear My Ring (Version 5)
14. Lotta Lovin'
15. Dance To The Bop
16. I Got It
17. I Got A Baby
18. Walkin' Home From School (Version 15)
19. Baby Blue (Version 7)
20. True To You (Version 12)
21. Yes I Love You Baby
22. Right Now



1958 - A Gene Vincent Record Date:
01. Five Feet Of Lovin
02. The Wayward Wind
03. Somebody Help Me
04. Keep It A Secret
05. Hey Good Lookin
06. Git It
07. Teen Age Partner
08. Peace Of Mind
09. Look What You Gone And Done To Me
10. Summertime
11. I Cant Help It If Im Still In Love With You
12. I Love You
13. Dance In The Street
14. Lovely Loretta
15. Little Lover
16. Rocky Road Blues
17. Rocky Road Blues Instrumental



1959 - Sounds Like Gene Vincent:
01. My Baby Don' Low
02. I Can't Believe You Want to Leave
03. I Might Have Known
04. In Love Again
05. You Are the One For Me
06. Ready Teddy
07. I Got to Get You Yet
08. Vincent's Blues
09. Maybe
10. Now Is the Hour
11. My Heart
12. Maybeline
13. Night Is So Lonely, The
14. Beautiful Brown Eyes
15. Say Mama
16. Be Bop Boogie Boy
17. Who's Pushing Your Swing
18. Anna Annabelle
19. Over the Rainbow



1960 - Crazy Times!:
01. Crazy Times
02. She She Little Sheila
03. Darlene
04. Everybody's Got a Date but Me
05. Why Don't You People Learn How to Drive
06. Greenback Dollar
07. Big Fat Saturday Night
08. Mitchiko From Tokyo
09. Hot Dollar
10. Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive
11. Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain
12. Pretty Pearly
13. Wild Cat
14. Right Here On Earth
15. Crazy Times (mono)
16. She She Little Sheila (mono)
17. Darlene (mono)
18. Everybody's Got a Date but Me (mono)
19. Why Don't You People Learn How to Drive (mono)
20. Greenback Dollar (mono)
21. Big Fat Saturday Night (mono)
22. Mitchiko From Tokyo (mono)
23. Hot Dollar (mono)
24. Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive (mono)
25. Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain (mono)
26. Pretty Pearly (mono)
27. Wild Cat (mono)
28. Right Here On Earth (mono)



1963 - The Crazy Beat of A Gene Vincent:
01. Crazy Beat
02. Important Words
03. It's Been Nice
04. Lonesome Boy
05. Good Lovin
06. I'm Gonna Catch Me A Rat
07. Rip It Up
08. High Blood Pressure
09. That's The Trouble With Love
10. Weeping Willow
11. Teardrops
12. Gone Gone Gone
13. Pistol Packin Mama
14. Mister Loneliness
15. If You Want My Lovin
16. I'm Going Home
17. Love Of A Man
18. Baby Don't Believe Him
19. Lucky Star

Gene Vincent only had one really big hit, "Be-Bop-a-Lula," which epitomized rockabilly at its prime in 1956 with its sharp guitar breaks, spare snare drums, fluttering echo, and Vincent's breathless, sexy vocals. Yet his place as one of the great early rock & roll singers is secure, backed up by a wealth of fine smaller hits and non-hits that rate among the best rockabilly of all time. The leather-clad, limping, greasy-haired singer was also one of rock's original bad boys, lionized by romanticists of past and present generations attracted to his primitive, sometimes savage style and indomitable spirit.

Vincent was bucking the odds by entering professional music in the first place. As a 20-year-old in the Navy, he suffered a severe motorcycle accident that almost resulted in the amputation of his leg, and left him with a permanent limp and considerable chronic pain for the rest of his life. After the accident he began to concentrate on building a musical career, playing with country bands around the Norfolk, VA, area. Demos cut at a local radio station, fronting a band assembled around Gene by his management, landed Gene Vincent & the Blue Caps a contract at Capitol, which hoped they'd found competition for Elvis Presley.

Indeed it had, as by this time Vincent had plunged into all-out rockabilly, capable of both fast-paced exuberance and whispery, almost sensitive ballads. The Blue Caps were one of the greatest rock bands of the '50s, anchored at first by the stunning silvery, faster-than-light guitar leads of Cliff Gallup. The slap-back echo of "Be-Bop-a-Lula," combined with Gene's swooping vocals, led many to mistake the singer for Elvis when the record first hit the airwaves in mid-1956, on its way to the Top Ten. The Elvis comparison wasn't entirely fair; Vincent had a gentler, less melodramatic style, capable of both whipping up a storm or winding down to a hush.

Brilliant follow-ups like "Race With the Devil," "Bluejean Bop," and "B-I-Bickey, Bi, Bo-Bo-Go" failed to click in nearly as big a way, although these too are emblematic of rockabilly at its most exuberant and powerful. By the end of 1956, the Blue Caps were beginning to undergo the first of constant personnel changes that would continue throughout the '50s, the most crucial loss being the departure of Gallup. The 35 or so tracks he cut with the band -- many of which showed up only on albums or b-sides -- were unquestionably Vincent's greatest work, as his subsequent recordings would never again capture their pristine clarity and uninhibited spontaneity.

Vincent had his second and final Top Twenty hit in 1957 with "Lotta Lovin'," which reflected his increasingly tamer approach to production and vocals, the wildness and live atmosphere toned down in favor of poppier material, more subdued guitars, and conventional-sounding backup singers. He recorded often for Capitol throughout the rest of the '50s, and it's unfair to dismiss those sides out of hand; they were respectable, occasionally exciting rockabilly, only a marked disappointment in comparison with his earliest work. His act was captured for posterity in one of the best scenes of one of the first Hollywood films to feature rock & roll stars, The Girl Can't Help It.

Live, Vincent continued to rock the house with reckless intensity and showmanship, and he became particularly popular overseas. A 1960 tour of Britain, though, brought tragedy when his friend Eddie Cochran, who shared the bill on Vincent's U.K. shows, died in a car accident that he was also involved in, though Vincent survived. By the early '60s, his recordings had become much more sporadic and lower in quality, and his chief audience was in Europe, particularly in England (where he lived for a while) and France.

His Capitol contract expired in 1963, and he spent the rest of his life recording for several other labels, none of which got him close to that comeback hit. Vincent never stopped trying to resurrect his career, appearing at a 1969 Toronto rock festival on the same bill as John Lennon, though his medical, drinking, and marital problems were making his life a mess, and diminishing his stage presence as well. He died at the age of 36 from a ruptured stomach ulcer, one of rock's first mythic figures.


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  • User offline
  • tommy554
  •  wrote in 06:04
    • Like
    • 1
many thanks for lossless
  • User offline
  • lukrock
  •  wrote in 13:13
    • Like
    • 0
FANTASTIC GIFT!!! GENE VINCENT IS MY BROTHER!